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War zones yield cheap shelter for tsunami homeless
05 Jan 2005
Source: AlertNet
By Tim Large

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Photo courtesy of the California Institute of Earth Art and Architecture
LONDON (AlertNet) - Sandbags and barbed wire, staples of war zones, could become the stuff of cheap emergency housing for survivors of the Asian tsunami if relief agencies adopt a new building concept developed in quake-prone California.

Originally dreamt up with lunar colonies in mind, the method known as "Superadobe" involves filling empty sacks with dirt and piling them in coils with strands of barbed wire acting like Velcro to provide stability.

Nader Khalili, the Iranian-American architect behind the idea, said the beehive-like structures could house thousands of people displaced by the giant waves on December 26 – particularly in war-torn areas such as Sri Lanka and Indonesia’s Aceh province.

“The materials of war - barbed wire and sand bags, which are available everywhere in the world - can now be utilised to provide safe and quick shelter in a sustainable way,” he told AlertNet in a telephone interview from Hesperia, California.

“Later, if they want that shelter to become permanent, then they can waterproof and plaster over it.”

The sandbag structures require few skills to build, can be expanded to include several rooms and have passed seismic testing required under California’s strict earthquake-zone building codes, Khalili said.

The cost of a single home is about $40, making the building method an attractive option for relief agencies racing to house millions left destitute by the killer tsunamis.

The Californian Institute of Earth Art and Architecture (Cal-Earth), a non-profit research institute set up by Khalili, is offering the technology free of charge to any aid organisations involved in the crisis.

The institute said it would provide free training in how to build the structures through hands-on workshops, videos and via the Internet.

Any groups interested should contact Cal-Earth at calearth@aol.com.

"Cal-Earth Institute is offering the technology and has trained apprentices ready to go for on-site supervision," said Iliona Outram, an architect at Cal-Earth. "Live Internet teaching from the institute in California is also ready."

Outram said the John and Geraldine Cusenza Family Foundation had offered to fund the construction of an undisclosed number of Superadobe houses in hard-hit areas of Asia.



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